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  1. Born on 9 May 1892, Zita was the daughter of Duke Robert of Bourbon-Parma (1848–1907), the last sovereign of the minor northern Italian duchy before the unification of Italy, and the latter’s second wife, Maria Antonia von Braganza (1862–1959), who was a member of the Portuguese royal family. Zita grew up in a large family in which ...

  2. More than 10,000 people turned up to get a glimpse of the former empress. When she died at the age of 96 in 1989, her funeral, conducted in accordance with the traditional rites of the Viennese Court, was both a tourist spectacle and a symbol of reconciliation between the Republic of Austria and the House of Habsburg-Lorraine.

  3. Oct 5, 2022 · The Habsburgs were a German-Austrian royal family, and one of the major European dynasties from the 15th to the 20th Centuries. The Habsburgs ruled over Austria from 1282 to 1918, and controlled ...

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  4. Reigned from November 1916 to November 1918. Born Zita Maria Grazia Adelgonda Michela Raffaella Gabriella Giuseppina Antonia Luisa Agnese of Bourbon-Parma in Pianore near Lucca, Italy, on May 9, 1892; died in Zizers, Switzerland, on March 14, 1989, and was buried on April 1, 1989, in the Habsburg crypt in Vienna's Capuchin Church; daughter of ...

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  6. A small court household in exile formed around Karl and Zita, consisting of the former court bishop Seydl, the aides-de-camp Count Wladimir Ledochowski and Zeno von Schonta together with the secretary Karl von Werkmann. Zita was accompanied by her lady-in-waiting Countess Gabrielle Bellegarde and the children’s governess, Therese von ...

  7. ZIZERS, SWITZERLAND -- Zita, 96, the last empress of the vast Hapsburg empire of Austria-Hungary whose role in a plan to end World War I led to exile from her Austrian palace, died March 14...

  8. Zita’s reaction to the suggestion that Emperor Karl should abdicate on 11 November 1918. Thanks to her iron will and intelligence, Zita became the definitive opinion leader in the family and the most important pillar of support for her husband, Emperor Karl I.